Source : THE AGE NEWS

By Jordan Fabian and Derek Wallbank
April 18, 2025 — 9.05am

President Donald Trump said he could force out Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, rebuking the notion that the US central bank is independent, and vented frustration that monetary policymakers had not recently cut interest rates.

“If I ask him to, he’ll be out of there,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Thursday when asked about an earlier social media post blasting the Fed chair as being too slow to lower rates.

Fed chairman Jerome Powell has been reluctant to speculate about how Donald Trump’s policies might affect the central bank’s decisions.Credit: Jamie Brown

“I’m not happy with him. I let him know it.”

The US president said in the post that “Powell’s termination cannot come fast enough!” A Fed spokesperson had declined to comment on Trump’s earlier remark.

At the White House, Trump didn’t respond to a follow-up question from a reporter about whether he was trying to remove the central bank chief. He also said Powell, who he nominated to take the Fed’s helm during his first term, has been “terrible”. There’s “essentially no inflation”, and if the Fed cut its benchmark, then borrowing costs would be lower also, he said.

“Other than interest rates, everything’s down,” Trump said, citing items including crude oil and petrol.

“Because we’ve got a Federal Reserve chairman who’s playing politics,” he said, noting that European rates, by contrast, have gone down.

There was little sign of a direct reaction to Trump’s remarks on Powell in financial markets on Thursday. Stocks climbed amid optimism about the potential for tariff deals with the European Union and Japan, and Treasuries retreated. The S&P 500 Index closed 0.2 per cent higher, while two-year yields were up about 3 basis points, at 3.8 per cent in late trading.

Powell’s term as Fed chair runs into May 2026, while his term as a governor lasts until February 2028. Trump’s comments come a day after Powell, speaking in Chicago, reiterated that the Fed isn’t in a rush to cut rates and is awaiting greater economic clarity.

Nathan Sheets, global chief economist at Citigroup, warned of the danger “if we now cross the Rubicon on central bank independence”, on top of adopting steep tariffs and other policies previously considered unusual for the US.

“The market volatility that we’ve seen over the past month or so would merely be the first course to a much, much longer and more challenging kind of downturn,” Sheets said on Bloomberg Television.

The risk is “we start seriously and permanently undermining confidence in the economy and the markets”, he said.

Democratic senator Elizabeth Warren said in a Thursday interview that “the president has free speech just like everyone else, but he does not have the power to fire Jerome Powell. And if he tries, he will crash the markets.”

“Even countries with dictators try to create a central bank that is independent of the president of the country in order to attract capital,” Warren said.

The president’s ability to remove top officials at agencies that had long been viewed as having a measure of independence from the White House has come into acute focus recently after the administration dismissed senior officials at the Federal Trade Commission, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB).

‘Our independence is a matter of law.’

US Federal Reserve boss Jerome Powell

The firings are the most direct challenge yet to a 1935 Supreme Court decision that paved the way for agency independence. Powell made reference on Wednesday to a current Supreme Court case with regard to the removal of the NLRB and MSPB officials.

“There’s a Supreme Court case. People will have read probably,” about it, Powell said in answering questions at the Economic Club of Chicago. “That’s a case that people are talking about a lot. I don’t think that decision will apply to the Fed – but I don’t know,” he said. “It’s a situation that we’re monitoring carefully.”

Powell also reiterated his argument that “our independence is a matter of law”, and that the Fed’s statute shows that there’s “no removal except for cause”.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent earlier this week indicated that the administration’s timeline for considering Powell’s successor was roughly six months away. Speaking in a Bloomberg Television interview, Bessent said that the timing for interviewing candidates to replace Powell was “sometime in the [northern autumn].”

Bessent also said that Fed independence in deciding on monetary policy was a “jewel box that has got to be preserved”.

US consumers want lower prices after 40-year-high inflation.

US consumers want lower prices after 40-year-high inflation.Credit: Bloomberg

The latest broadside from Trump on the Fed recalls criticism he heaped on Powell during the president’s first term, when he repeatedly blasted Powell and his colleagues for not easing policy quickly or strongly enough for his liking.

Trump’s recent moves to ramp up tariffs on the rest of the world have raised concern about slowing domestic growth and price increases, making the Fed’s policymaking all the more challenging. In his speech on Wednesday, Powell reiterated his view that the Fed must ensure the import duties don’t trigger a more persistent rise in inflation.

“Our obligation is to keep longer-term inflation expectations well anchored and to make certain that a one-time increase in the price level does not become an ongoing inflation problem,” Powell said.

Trump has argued in favour of lowering borrowing costs – something that might help any businesses looking to boost domestic production behind the new tariff wall the administration is constructing. But most economists see inflation as still too high for policymakers to take that step.

As in his first term, Trump compared the Fed with the European Central Bank (ECB), which on Thursday lowered its benchmark rate by a quarter of a point to 2.25 per cent. His post came just before that anticipated move.

“And yet, ‘Too Late’ Jerome Powell of the Fed, who is always TOO LATE AND WRONG, yesterday issued a report which was another, and typical, complete ‘mess!’ Trump wrote.

“Too Late should have lowered Interest Rates, like the ECB, long ago, but he should certainly lower them now.”

He added that oil and grocery prices are down, and that the US is “getting RICH” on tariffs.

While crude oil is down well over 10 per cent so far this year, food prices have been climbing. Groceries are up 2.4 per cent over the past 12 months.

Asked about the Fed in her press conference on Thursday, ECB president Christine Lagarde said, “Let me just say very squarely that I have a lot of respect for my esteemed colleague and friend Jay Powell”. She also highlighted the history of consultation between the Fed and ECB and pledged that this would continue.

Bloomberg

Get a note directly from our foreign correspondents on what’s making headlines around the world. Sign up for our weekly What in the World newsletter.